. And, if you don't believe me when I say how exciting it was, there's a vinyl LP of it around if you can find it - I still play it. Pete Shade on flute, Ziggy Ludvigsen (tenor); Alan Littlejohn, Gerry Salisbury (trumpets); Dave Castle (alto) just some of the names led by Vic Richards on drums. Sixteen men swinging (sometimes more) and not a chart in sight! The landlady, Lillian Delaney, also sang. Reminiscent of JATP without the histrionics, that Tally Ho session was probably the best I'd ever heard. Although if Newcastle's Jazz Café had more floor space for the jammers it could maybe run it close...
I returned to the Tally Ho a few years later. The jam had gone but Roger Nobes was leading a tidy Goodman style sextet. This was the afternoon when I learned of the murder of Lord Mountbatten by the IRA. Paradoxically, the next time I called in it had become an Irish pub... (To be continued)...Lance.

3 comments :
Thank you from Lilian's daughter sadly I just lost her and a dear friend sent me this link
Sallyjanedelaney@gmail.com
Yes, great memories of the Sunday lunchtime sessions. We had to suffer Watneys Red Barrel but it was a small sacrifice to listen to that wall of sound. The line-up grew as the session went on - stick another crate down at the end of the line and blow. My favourite was Willy Garnett - a cool dude tenor with his leather jacket and wispy beard a la Charlie Mingus. It's great to reminisce....
We lived a couple of hundred yards away from the Tally Ho which was our local and Sunday lunchtimes were truly memorable. The great Phil Seaman lived in our house and drummed like no other.
Post a Comment